These climate scientists need to take a lesson in human biology.
Economic
Collapse Will Limit Climate Change, Predicts Climate Scientist
Tim Bruckner
14
April, 2015
If
you think your doctor is hard to understand, try talking to a climate
scientist.
In
late 2014, the World Bank published a remarkable document that should
have shaken the international business world. Titled "Turn
Down the Heat: Confronting the New Climate Normal",
it drew on 1,300 publications to explore the impacts of a world four
degrees centigrade warmer - the world our grandchildren seem likely
to inherit before the end of this century.
Authored
by climate scientists of the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Research,
the report's three hundred plus pages are densely written and often
hard for non-experts to understand. However, some passages about the
impact of a 4°C temperature rise are crystal clear. Here a section
on North Africa:
"There is a considerable likelihood of warming reaching 4°C above pre-industrial levels within this century... Crop yields are expected to decline by 30 percent with 1.5-2°C warming and up to 60 percent with 3-4°C warming... Large fractions of currently marginal rain-fed cropland are expected to be abandoned or transformed into grazing land; current grazing land, meanwhile, may become unsuitable for any agricultural activity..."
One
sentence really caught my attention: "In a 4°C world, mean
summer temperatures are expected to be up to 8°C warmer in parts of
Algeria, Saudi Arabia and Iraq..." If summer mean temperatures
are set to rise by more eight degrees in this already scorching
region, I wondered, what about maximum temperatures?
According to the study:
"In a 4°C world, 80 percent of summer months are projected to be hotter than 5-sigma (unprecedented heat extremes) by 2100, and about 65 percent are projected to be hotter than 5-sigma during the 2071-2099 period." [emphasis in the original]
As
I've got no idea what that actually means, I jumped at the chance to
talk with climate scientist Christopher
Reyer,
one of the co-authors of the study, on the edge of a public event
organized by the World Bank in Morocco last week.
So,
I asked, what kind of maximum summer temperatures do people in
Morocco's fabled desert city of Marrakech face in a +4°C world?
"That's very hard to answer," he told me, "but the
distribution curve will shift towards the extreme ends."
Well,
yes, but considering that the average summer maximum there is already
38 degrees,
and the local record maximum to date is a sizzling 47 degrees
Centigrade [116 degrees Fahrenheit], what kind of heat are we looking
at? Reyer told me that he'd looked over that question with his team
back in Germany - I'd emailed it to him beforehand - and basically
couldn't answer it without some complicated calculations taking into
account the exact shape of the city's current temperature curve.
Exasperated,
I dug further. What does '5-sigma' mean? "It's quite clear that
temperatures will be warmer," Reyer said. By way of comparison,
he explained, the 2003
heat wave in Europe [in
which an estimated 70,000 people died during a 2.3°C
hotter-than-usual summer], was only a 3-sigma event.
So,
would it be possible to survive a 5-sigma event outdoors in
Marrakech? "That depends how you define 'survive',"
answered the climate wonk, adding that it would probably be
survivable if you kept to the shade and didn't move. However, any
kind of human activity would be impossible in that kind of
temperature.
To
wrap up the interview, I asked Christopher Reyer how much hotter he
thought the planet would be by the year 2100. "I'm not sure,"
he replied, "I'm not an expert on the policy side." I
persisted, asking him not for an official projection, just for his
best personal guess, a single number. He visibly relaxed.
"I guess it should be between three and four degrees hotter. We used to think that we were headed for +8°C, but that will never happen. We are not even on track for +6°C because economies will be collapsing long before we get there. We know that after +2°C, dangerous things start happening, and we start passing crucial tipping points, like the West Antarctica ice sheet collapse, which has reportedly already begun."
What
will a two degrees warmer world, which we seem likely to inhabit by
2050, look like?
"Two degrees is not a picnic either. Imagine events like the 2003 European heat wave, the 2010 Russian heat wave which had repercussions on the global wheat market, and Hurricane Katrina, all of them happening simultaneously everywhere in the world."
Oh,
so that's what the climate scientist was trying to say all along: We
face an avalanche of global disasters during our lifetime, and unless
we slam the brakes on carbon pollution fast, the global economy will
collapse to boot.
And,
be warned, there will be 5-sigma heat events too
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